| The White Artic OwlShepherds the spirits of the dead to the afterworld.by Timothy Wilkie
 
 
 
    Songs of  the Ragman…
 
    It wasn’t the rain it was the wind  and the low hanging clouds. It was
    impossible to tell up from down. My  instruments were useless, and the radio
    was out. I had  lost the beacon about ten
    minutes earlier and the wind buffeted my tiny  craft and threw itself
    against the glass with much menace. Snow scooped up like  hands and stole my
    horizon. It felt like I had been wrestling with the craft  for hours and my
    arms and shoulders ached. As I looked out the windshield the  world of white
    was everywhere and as I flew in and out of the sunlight, I
    was aware of the fact that this was a world of
    hunters, and stone-cold killers. If you lived in this wasteland, you were
    either on the run or you were an Inuit Indian born and bred to kill their
    survival depended on it. These were the people of the ice.
 
    Suddenly the sky dropped, and I  disappeared into the clouds. Like smoke, it
    hung all around me. It was obvious  I needed to set my plane down. The
    problem was that I had left civilization  behind except for
    the mine and that was still a  good hour away
    across the ice.
 
    Dark and cold the clouds hid  everything. Contrary to common belief ice is
    not flat. I flew over a herd of  elk making their way north barely missing
    them as my wheels touched down. With  the low ceiling they had just appeared
    out of nowhere.
 
    I exhaled. I had been holding it in  as I missed them by only a hair and
    suddenly right there in front of me was a  mound of ice. I tried to lift
    again, and I felt my landing gear snap as my  plane went end over end,
    repeatedly snapping both my wings off. I was up and  down and then my head
    hit something and I blacked out.
 
    A cinerous shrew was the first  thing I saw when I opened my eyes, it was
    pretty much under my nose. The wind  roared like a hungry polar bear, and I
    treaded lightly on the ice as I pulled  myself out and weighed the damage to
    my plane. What plane? I thought. There was  nothing left but junk. “What a
    fucking mess,” I whispered to myself.
 
    “Pray prayers so strong that not  one word can fail.” This was a line from a
    poem I read in college by Helen Hunt  Jackson. It seemed so fitting.  The
    snow  was a shredded bridal veil across the ice.
 
    But wait in the distance there were  what appeared to be a shrouded funeral
    pyre. The Inuit wrapped their dead in  skins and then burned them on the
    ice. They were hunters and if they wanted to,  they could
    gut me in an instant and leave me. No  one would
    ever find my frozen corpse. In between there was a glimmer of the  deep
    meaning I would have to be careful because apparently there was open water
    between them and me.
 
    It was just getting dark, and the  crunch of ice and snow underfoot was like
    thunder. One look at my radio and it  was clear it was toast. Every bush
    pilot knew there was a time when the day  could come.
 
    As I got close to the break in the  ice, I could see it was a big black
    swirling cavity of death with no way  across. It went as far as I could see
    in both directions. On the other side I  could hear the Inuit squaws
    singing. “Who, ha, ha. Who, ha, ha. The very breath  of life sang.
 
    “The  white artic owl
 
    Who,ha,ha!
 
    Slowly  stroking by
 
    Who,ha ha!
 
    I want to end me
 
    Who,ha,ha!
 
    It's my  time to die.”
 
    The funeral pyre burned high and  from where I stood, I could only see
    silhouettes of the mourners and I wasn’t  sure if they saw me at all.
 
    As I walked along the riff trying  to find a place to cross, I met many
    traveling companions. The head of a dog  half buried in the snow and a small
    tent ring on a ridge crest. The bones of a  bird circled by a ring of
    stones. “Witchcraft!” I whispered to myself.
 
    I looked around but the world was  everywhere as I walked into the last
    sunset. The darkness was ladened with  stars and I thought what if they
    weren’t pricks of light but openings to  heaven. Millions of candles burning
    in windows across the sky welcoming me  home.
 
    The ice glittered fragile like fine  crystal easily broken and sharp to the
    touch. I was already waiting, no,  longing for the return of the sun. The
    darkness was terrifying on the ice. You  couldn’t see the cracks or openings
    and the nights were so long that even the  dead grew restless, and you saw
    things that could never be.
 
    She invited me in and showed me her  lighter side and I fell in love. A
    garden of ice and for many years she told me  I was welcome and then she
    took everything from me. That was what life in  Alaska was. But still she
    wasn’t satisfied, she wanted my soul.
 
    I walked to my grave until my legs  and hands had no feeling in them. That
    was what walking on the ice was. The old  timers said it was like walking to
    your grave except you never got there you  froze to death first and then the
    ice kept you forever.
 
    I thought of both the woman and the  child. I was the woman and the child
    who hated and loved my mother. I was  always ashamed of her, and I was
    determined I would never be like
 
    her. I refused to lie down and let  some man walk all over me. But like the
    unborn child in my womb, I craved life.
 
    Suddenly there he was across the  huge gap in the ice. It was the man that
    had been burning in his coat of fire.  Out of the night flew the white artic
    owl with all his wisdom. “You are dying,”  it said to me. “You are wandering
    aimlessly. You must pull yourself together.”  But still the man burned in
    his coat of fire. His white skin flaked off as ash  with his eyes charred
    and blackened, he tried to speak but it only came out as  a stream of white
    feathers.
 
    A howling suddenly came out of the  darkness and the grinding sound of teeth
    on bone. A new wind arose, and I  caught the scent of onions, chives, and
    scattered grasses. It was all the  smells of spring. The lights were on in
    the slaughterhouse and the pigs were  squealing. The flesh slid off as the
    flies arrived. I longed for the sun, but I  couldn’t even see the clouds.
    This was the second day of darkness, and I was  blind.
 
    The chanting returned.
 
    “Who, ha,  ha!   Who, ha, ha!
 
    A bird  egg found in winter
 
    Who, ha,  ha!
 
    Mask of  eyes left to see
 
    Who,ha, ha!
 
    Loved ones crossed over
 
    Who,ha, ha!
 
    Return to me.”
 
    I listened and when they stopped, I  cried out. “Help me!” But no one came
    because the figures I had seen were just  frozen mist coming off the ice. I
    had become bewitched. I looked back at the  way I had come, and I couldn’t
    see the funeral pyre anymore. I was truly lost  and not even God could find
    me. Lost in plain view on thousands of miles of  ice. The artic owl spoke to
    me again. “Death will come quickly, and your grave  will not be deep.”
 
    Terrified, I thought where will I  carry the dead?
 
    “In your heart,” he said.
 
    “There is food on the table,” my  mother announced. There was always food on
    our table growing up; we never went  hungry. It wasn’t fancy. We were poor,
    but it was good food. My mother would  slave over it on the holidays, and no
    one ever left the table hungry. It was  not an easy job, there were six kids
    in our family. Perhaps I had judged my  mother too harshly.
 
    I dropped to my knees and scooped  up some snow in my hands and let it melt
    so I could drink it. It tasted like  grieving wine, but it did the job and
    for that I was thankful. What were these  drops frozen on my cheeks? Were
    they tears of hope or tears of defeat? For the  wise old artic owl had
    promised me my death would be quick.
 
    Holding my belly was the only way I  could comfort my baby. “Once a dream
    did weave a shade over your angel guarded  bed,” I sobbed. It was the one
    line of a William Blake poem I remembered as a  child. My mother had always
    read it to me when I was frightened. She always  seemed to be there when us
    children were frightened. I was so scared and then  she was there standing
    over me. Demanding I get out of the fetal position on  the ice and stand up.
    “Mother I’m so tired and it is peaceful here let me  sleep.” I begged.
 
    She looked upon me and smiled. Slowly she turned
    and pointed back the way I had come. The  chants started again as I stumbled
    to my feet.
 
    “Who, ha,  ha!
 
    The fur  will keep you warm
 
    “Who, ha,  ha!
 
    Until the  summer thaw
 
    “Who,ha, ha!
 
    And all the snow is gone.
 
    Who, ha, ha!
 
    All come near and hear my song.
 
    Who,ha,ha!  Who,ha, ha! Who, ha, ha!
 
    As I made my way slowly back across  the ice, I came across an old Innuit
    woman wrapped in a fur her body mummified  by the ice. I
    knelt down and prayed over her  thanking her for
    the gift of her fur as I slipped it off her body. It was an  ancient custom
    also practiced by the people of wrapping the dead in fur and  setting their
    bodies adrift on the ice. This woman had been a gift given to me  by the
    spirits. I knew this because it was a practice that was seldom used
    anymore. There was no doubt in my mind that she had been the one that had
    captured the spirit of the bird within the ring of stone. She had captured
    the  white artic owl, and I had set it free.
 
    When I  looked up, I saw the lit torches coming towards me across the ice.
    It was an  Inuit hunting party and suddenly they were all around me and
    welcomed me with  open arms. Safely within the warmth of the people they
    took me home.
 
 THE END © 2024 Timothy Wilkie
 Bio: Timothy Wilkie is a local hero in the Hudson Valley.
From his music to his art and storytelling. He's an old hippy and a
storyteller in the truest sense of the word. He has two grown sons and
loves to spend time with them. His writing credits include Aphelion,
Horror-zine, Dark Dossier and many more... E-mail: Timothy Wilkie Comment on this story in the Aphelion Forum 
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